Following Saturday’s mega UFC 205 event, which marked the organization’s long-awaited New York City debut, UFC President Dana White said the pay-per-view event at Madison Square Garden broke numerous records.

UFC 100 was a milestone 2009 event with a deep fight card. UFC 202, which featured a McGregor vs. Nate Diaz rematch in August, then apparently broke it. Now, with McGregor again on top of the card, UFC 205 appears to be the new high-water mark – just at “Notorious” predicted.

“We did,” White said when asked if UFC 205 was the new top dog. “We broke the record.”

However, White suggested that record could stand for quite some time; after all, “Jesus is going to have to fight the devil” to break it. Additionally, the hefty ticket prices for UFC 205 were too much for many fans.

“We definitely priced fans out,” he said. “I mean, there’s no doubt that that did happen. It’s not one of my favorite things to do, but basically … it’s dynamic pricing. It’s no different than a plane ticket. When there’s so much demand a plane ticket goes up. That’s what happened.”

UFC 205 could also prove to be a record-breaker in other ways, he said.

“We broke every record in UFC history tonight – every record,” White said after UFC 205. “The only one I’m waiting on now is the FOX number – how we did on (FS1). It would be really, really weird and make no sense if we didn’t break that one too.”

White, of course, is referring to the FS1-televised prelims that lead into the PPV main card. The four-bout lineup, which concluded with ex-champ Frankie Edgar (21-5-1 MMA, 15-5-1 UFC) picking up a decision victory over featherweight Jeremy Stephens (25-13 MMA, 12-12 UFC), could top UFC 194’s prelim record of approximately 2 million viewers. (UFC 194, perhaps unsurprisingly, also featured McGregor in the headliner.)